McMillan v. Hadley

78 Ind. 590
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 8370
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 78 Ind. 590 (McMillan v. Hadley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMillan v. Hadley, 78 Ind. 590 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Newcomb, C.

The appellees, Hadley and 'Willoughby,, sued to foreclose a mortgage executed to them by Jacob Thomas and Isaac W. Sanders.

Among the defendants was Robert M. Wingate, the ancestor of the appellants, who has died since the judgment, and this appeal is prosecuted by his heirs.

The complaint alleged that the note secured by the mortgage was a partnership debt; that it was given for money borrowed to make a payment on said land, purchased by Thomas- and Sanders as partners, and that said land was held by them as partners.

Wingate filed an answer and cross complaint, alleging that- . he was the owner of one-half the land by virtue of a sheriff’s, sale of Thomas’s half of the land, and a deed made pursuant-to such sale; and that he held by assignment several certificates of purchase of the interest of Sanders in said land, executed by the sheriff of Clay county pursuant to sales made by him on certain executions against said Sanders, issued upon judgments which were prior liens to the mortgage of the plaintiffs. A denial was filed to the answer and cross complaint. The cause was then tried by a jury, which found a general verdict for the plaintiffs, and specially, in answer to interrogatories, that the debt sued upon was a partnership debt of Thomas &■ Sanders, and that the mortgaged land was their partnership property. Various exceptions were reserved by the de[592]*592fendant "Wingate upon the trial, which, as well as the overruling of his motion for a new trial, were properly saved by bills of exception.

The evidence gives the following history of the facts on which the parties respectively base their claims to the land in •controversy, namely:

That Thomas & Sanders purchased said land and took a title bond therefor in their individual names, August 13th, 1873. This was followed by a deed to them, September 18th, 1873. The deed was to Jacob Thomas and Isaac "W. Sanders, in the ordinary form, there being nothing to indicate that they •purchased as partners. The purchasers had no joint fund, but •each paid one-half of the purchase-money from his own means, so far as payment was made at the dates of the purchase and the deed. On February 16th, 1874, Thomas & Sanders borrowed of the plaintiffs $1,000, to make a payment of that amount upon said real estate, and executed their joint note, signed in their • individual names therefor; and on November 215d, 1877, they, with their wives, executed the mortgage in question to secure •the payment of said note to the plaintiffs. This land was purchased by Thomas & Sanders with a view to lay it out into lots as an addition to the town of Brazil, and they prepared a plat of the same, but the plat was never acknowledged or re- . corded, and the anticipated speculation proved a failure.

This land was the only property ever owned by Thomas & ■ Sanders, either jointly or in common.

"Wingate claimed under the following judgments and sheriff’s sales:

Judgment of Austin "W. Knight v. Jacob Thomas, rendered May 29th, 1877. Sale of Thomas’s undivided half of the land in controversy, by virtue of an execution issued on said judgment, January 11th, 1879, to Robert M. "Wingate for •$474.61, who received a certificate of purchase from the sheriff.

Judgment in favor of ¥m. Burrick v. Isaac "W. Sanders, ■rendered June 8th, 1875. The sheriff’s certificate of pur•chase was issued to Charles H. Knight, on sale of Sanders’s [593]*593undivided half of said land to satisfy this judgment, January 19th, 1878, and the certificate was assigned to Wingate, December 9th, 1878. The bid at the sheriff’s sale was $276.33. Judgment of Andrew Wallace et al. v. Sanders, rendered June 8th, 1877. Sheriff’s certificate of purchase on same was issued to Joseph M. Wallace, May 25th, 1878, and by him assigned to Wingate, December 9th, 1878. Bid at sheriff’s sale, $279.

Judgment of Charles S. Andrews v. Sanders, rendered June 27th, 1877. Execution sale to Robert L. Keith, February 22d, 1878, for $405.05. Certificate of purchase assigned to Wingate, May 9th, 1878. A sheriff’s deed was duly issued to Wingate on his purchase of Thomas’s share of the land on the Austin W. Knight execution. This foreclosure proceeding was commenced March 15th, 1879.

On these facts and the finding of the jury that Thomas & Sanders owned the land as partners, and that the note to plaintiffs was their partnership debt, the plaintiffs claim that as such partnership creditors they are entitled to satisfaction out of the partnership property in preference to the judgment creditors of Thomas and Sanders individually.

On the other hand, it is claimed for Wingate that he and his assignors were purchasers for value, without any notice of said alleged partnership, and that he consequently had the better title.

The law is well settled, as a general rule, in this State, that partnership creditors are entitled to preference in the payment of their claims out of the proceeds of partnership property, and that creditors of the individul partners are entitled only to so much as would be the distributive portion of the debtor partner on a final winding up of the partnership. Matlock v. Matlock, 5 Ind. 403; Kistner v. Sindlinger, 33 Ind. 114; Coffin v. Mitchell, 34 Ind. 293; Smith v. Evans, 37 Ind. 526; Huston v. Neil, 41 Ind. 504; Donellan v. Hardy, 57 Ind. 393; Meridian National Bank v. Brandt, 51 Ind. 56; Conant v. Frary, 49 Ind. 530.

[594]*594But this, like most general rules, is subject to qualification, and is not to be enforced against parties having the legal estate and equal equities. Thus, where the apparent title is in one member of a partnership, and a purchaser from him is ignorant that it is partnership property, such purchaser will hold against the other partners and the partnership creditors. 1 Washburn Real Prop. 667-669; 3 Kent’s Com. p. 38. So, when the estate is apparently a tenancy in common, though in fact it is partnership property, one partner may convey a good title to his apparent share as a tenant in common, to a bona fide purchaser. On this point, Field, C. J., said, in Dupuy v. Leavenworth, 17 Cal. 263, that “ the real property of a copartnership may be conveyed by one partner, on his individual account, to the extent of his legal title, so as to cut off the equitable rights of the copartnership, or its liability to the payment of the copartnership debts. A bona fide purchaser, for a valuable consideration, without notice of the partnership character of the property, will take the title in such cases, freed from the equitable claims of others, upon grounds of the highest policy.” See, also, Crooker v. Crooker, 46 Me. 250; Hoxie v. Carr, 1 Sumn. 173; Forde v. Herron, 4 Munf. 316; Buck v. Winn, 11 B. Mon. 320; Johnson v. Clark, 18 Kan. 157; Hogle v. Lowe, 12 Nev. 286; Van Slyck v. Skinner, 41 Mich. 186; Hiscock v. Phelps, 49 N. Y. 97; Lewis v. Anderson, 20 Ohio St. 281; Meridian Nat. Bank v. Brandt, 51 Ind. 56; Parker v. Bowles, 57 N. H. 491.

Chapter 82 of the Revised Statutes (1 R. S. 1876, p. 361) contains the following provisions:

“Sec. 7.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Ind. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmillan-v-hadley-ind-1881.